Born in Mar del Plata to parents of Italian descent, Piazzolla’s family moved to New York City when he was just four. By eight he was playing the bandoneón. As a teenager, he returned to Argentina and within a few years landed a position in Aníbal Troilo’s famous tango orchestra. Soon bored by a genre that he felt had reached an impasse, in his spare time he cultivated his long-held interest in classical music by composing a substantial body of “serious” music. In 1954, anticipating a career in classical music, he went to France to study with the world’s most famous composition pedagogue, Nadia Boulanger. The encounter changed his life—and the history of the tango—forever.
Boulanger considered Piazzolla’s music to be well-crafted and noted its debt to Ravel, Stravinsky and Bartók. But she thought it lacked spirit. When she learned that Piazzolla composed and arranged tangos for a living (he was ashamed of this), she asked him to play one. He reluctantly obliged. Boulanger then took his hands in hers and said: “Astor, this is beautiful. Here is the true Piazzolla—do not ever leave him.”
Calling this epiphany “the great revelation of my life”, Piazzolla returned to Argentina where he founded his famous Quintet (bandonenón, violin, piano, electric guitar, bass), the principal vehicle for his nuevo tango, a new style that incorporated the dissonant harmonies and cross-rhythms of twentieth-century classical masters. In the process, he took the tango off the dance floor and into the concert hall.
Piazzolla’s take on tango, however, met with fierce resistance from traditionalists. After one concert, an audience member asked snarkily: “Maestro, why don’t you play a tango?” The question haunted him throughout his career. In his memoirs, he even claimed to have once been beaten in the streets by a disgruntled member of tango’s old guard.
Las cuatro estaciones porteñas
Among the many pieces that Piazzolla wrote for his Quintet is Las cuatro estaciones porteñas (The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires; “porteño” means “of Buenos Aires”). All four pieces bristle with energy, grating dissonances and percussive punch. Slow interludes provide contrasting moments of nostalgic lyricism. The fast-slow-fast scheme (except in Invernio porteño (winter) where it is reversed) is perhaps the most significant reference to the work’s famous predecessor, Vivaldi’s Four Seasons. Otherwise Piazzolla’s seasons, which were not even conceived as a set, have little to do with Vivaldi’s in either style or concept. Whereas Vivaldi’s are pastoral and literal (dogs barking, birds twittering and storms brewing), Piazzolla’s are urban, tied to a specific locality and depict each season’s essence rather than its literal sounds. Piazzolla wrote Verano porteño (summer) first, in 1965, and completed the rest by 1969.
Milonga del ángel, Muerte del ángel, Resurrección del angel, Tango del ángel
Even more loosely interrelated are the pieces that make up the “angel” series, four of which appear on this recording (composed between 1957 and 1965). The haunting Milonga del ángel (Milonga of the Angel) is one of Piazzolla’s signature pieces: soothing, yet tinged with yearning, it creeps under the skin. Muerte del ángel (Death of the Angel) begins and ends with a furious fugue that does as much to invigorate the tango as to breath new life into the old baroque form. The steady, descending chromatic bass line in Resurrección del ángel (Resurrection of the Angel) recalls the baroque symbol of lament. Tango del ángel (Tango of the Angel) is alternately driving and mellow.
Oblivion
Piazzolla was also much in demand as a film composer. In 1985, he composed the music for the award-winning El exilio de Gardel by the leftist Argentine director Fernando Solanas, who, despite his disapproval of Piazzolla’s “questionable opinions” about the brutal military dictatorship in the 1970s, recognized that Piazzolla “succeeded in expressing the anguish, melancholy, nostalgia and depression so typical of the man from Buenos Aires”. Oblivion, with its soaring lines and gently pulsating accompaniment, is the highlight of the score to another film, Enrico IV (1984), by Marco Bellocchio after Pirandello’s play.